RESEARCH TASKS AS A METHOD OF DEVELOPMENT OF PROGRAMMING SKILLS

2019 ◽  
pp. 48-51
Author(s):  
N. Yu. Dobrovolskaya ◽  
A. V. Kharchenko

The article reveals the relevance of the formation of research competence in high school and the first year of university in the study of informatics. It is proposed to achieve the goal while performing research tasks on programming. The structure of the study is described, a number of examples invariant to the choice of programming language is given. Performing tasks allows the student to formulate a generalized scheme for solving problems of a certain type. The use of research tasks in teaching practice contributes to the formation of the student’s holistic perception of programming language structures and corresponding data structures. As mastering the basic themes of the discipline, the student masters various mechanisms for solving problems. The proposed research tasks can expand the method of teaching informatics.

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 185
Author(s):  
Tuane Telles Rodrigues ◽  
Matheus Fernando Keppel ◽  
Wilson De Oliveira Miranda

O ensino no Brasil vem sofrendo grandes transformações, oportunizadas pelas frequentes discussões que buscam aprimorar a prática docente e o aprendizado discente de forma humanizadora e democrática. Este texto busca mostrar a complexidade que a tradução do ensino de Geografia possui, principalmente em razão das divergências na criação de sinais para representar os mesmos conteúdos, uma vez que a estrutura da Língua Brasileira de Sinais não possui um consenso nacional frente às especificidades de seu público-alvo. O método empregado teve como base a observação das aulas de Geografia de alunos surdos e deficientes auditivos da Escola Estadual de Educação Especial Dr. Reinaldo Fernando Cóser, localizada no município de Santa Maria/RS, e a aplicação de uma oficina pedagógica que objetivou a alfabetização cartográfica de alunos do sexto ano do ensino fundamental até o primeiro ano do ensino médio. Como resultado, discutimos conteúdos cartográficos que mais trouxeram dificuldades de tradução, e refletimos sobre a necessidade de definir um consenso nacional para a prática didática, principalmente pela existência de regionalismos com implicações linguísticas relevantes que alteram conceitualmente os conteúdos, de forma que os professores possam utilizar os sinais de forma segura e compreensível em qualquer lugar do país.ABSTRACTThe teaching in Brazil has been undergoing great transformations, opportunized by the frequent discussions that seek to improve teaching practice and student learning in a humanizing and democratic way. This text seeks to show the complexity that the translation of Geography teaching has, mainly due to the differences in the creation of signals to represent the same contents, since the structure of the Brazilian Sign Language does not have a national consensus regarding the specificities of its target Audience. The method used was based on the observation of the Geography classes of deaf and hearing impaired students of the State School of Special Education Dr. Reinaldo Fernando Cóser, located in the city of Santa Maria / RS, and the application of a pedagogical workshop that aimed at literacy cartographic study of students from the sixth year of elementary school to the first year of high school. As a result, we discuss cartographic contents that have brought more difficulties for translation, and we reflect on the need to define a national consensus for didactic practice, mainly by the existence of regionalisms with relevant linguistic implications that conceptually alter the contents, so that teachers can use the signals in a safe way and understandable anywhere in the country.Keywords: Geography Teaching; School Cartography; Libras.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bridget Grogan

This article reports on and discusses the experience of a contrapuntal approach to teaching poetry, explored during 2016 and 2017 in a series of introductory poetry lectures in the English 1 course at the University of Johannesburg. Drawing together two poems—Warsan Shire’s “Home” and W.H. Auden’s “Refugee Blues”—in a week of teaching in each year provided an opportunity for a comparison that encouraged students’ observations on poetic voice, racial identity, transhistorical and transcultural human experience, trauma and empathy. It also provided an opportunity to reflect on teaching practice within the context of decoloniality and to acknowledge the need for ongoing change and review in relation to it. In describing the contrapuntal teaching and study of these poems, and the different methods employed in the respective years of teaching them, I tentatively suggest that canonical Western and contemporary postcolonial poems may reflect on each other in unique and transformative ways. I further posit that poets and poems that engage students may open the way into initially “less relevant” yet ultimately rewarding poems, while remaining important objects of study in themselves.


Author(s):  
Muchammad Ismail Hamzah

In accordance with the technological advances of web-based information delivery via the internet has more value, because the information can be delivered easily, quickly,  spacious and interactive. Because this way, information is simply inserted into the web and within seconds the information can be accessed globally.  Submission of this information has not been used in Ngebruk Islamic Junior High School, Sumberpucung District, Malang Regency. Submission of the information in these schools still use manual way, such as by mail, bulletin boards, or orally. Surely this way less effective and efficient, since it requires a lot of expenses such as the purchase of paper, printing machine and maintenance, ink, and its scope was limited to the scope of the school.To reduce the above problems, the delivery of information in this school need to use web media created with the PHP programming language and MySQL. PHP is a programming language that is used to allow users to process information on the web, while MySQL is the software used to store the information on the web. Once the web is run online, the school entered information to the web, can be accessed via intenet by anyone without the limited space and time


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nélia Lúcia Fonseca

This study first approaches the history of the observer’s gaze, that is, as observers, we are forming or constructing our way of visualizing moving images. Secondly, it reaffirms the importance and need of resistance of the teaching / learning of Art as a compulsory curricular component for high school. Finally, the third part reports an experience with video art production in a class of first year high school students, establishing an interrelationship between theory and practice, that is, we study video art content to reach the production of videos, aiming as a final result, the art videos created by the students of the Reference Center in Environmental Education Forest School Prof. Eidorfe Moreira High School. The first and second stages of this research share a theoretical part of the Master ‘s thesis, Making films on the Island: audiovisual production as an escape line in Cotijuba, periphery of Belem, completed in 2013.


NASPA Journal ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Lubker ◽  
Edward F Etzel

The freshman year of college is usually acknowledged as a stressful time of social and academic adjustment. During this period, first-year students face many social and intellectual challenges. For high school athletes, the combined impact of college transition plus disengagement from sport can further complicate first-semester adjustment and may also affect first-year retention. Together, this complex phenomenon may diminish self-concept, challenge one’s felt sense of being an athlete, and elicit emotional responses usually associated with college and elite athlete disengagement resulting in a negative adjustment to the college environment. The purpose of this investigation was to examine the differences in the reported athletic identity and college adjustment patterns of first-year college males and females (N = 317) and how disengagement from sports may affect these variables. Three status groups were used in this study: disengaged athletes (DAs; n = 133), high school senior nonathletes (n = 106), and current first-year college varsity athletes (n = 78). Significant differences were observed between groups in reported level of athletic identity where disengaged high senior athletes had significantly different scores than both college athletes and high school nonathletes. This finding may warrant an investigation on how we conceptualize the terms “athlete” and “nonathlete.” The investigation into college adjustment patterns found that first-year females reported higher academic adjustment to college than males in the total sample. Specifically in the DA athlete group, significant differences in college adjustment for both gender and level of athletic identity were found. For this group, significant differences in college adjustment were found related to the nature of disengagement and perceived level of social support. Potential applications of these findings for college personnel and future directions related to research are explored.


IFLA Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 034003522098335
Author(s):  
Pamela McKirdy

This study explores how New Zealand primary school students’ experiences of school libraries affected their attitudes towards reading for pleasure once they entered secondary school. Two hundred and seventy-six students in their first year at high school completed a survey asking about their primary school libraries. The students were asked to self-identify as keen readers, occasional readers or non-readers. The results were analysed in a spreadsheet, considering variables such as attitude to reading, former school and family background. The students were mainly positive about their libraries, but were bothered by cramped and noisy environments and books they perceived as babyish. Students from schools with a librarian were more positive about reading for fun than those from schools where the library was not prioritised. Students from a family background where reading was encouraged were more likely to maintain a positive attitude to reading by the time they reached high school.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Eunjin Seo ◽  
Hae Yeon Lee ◽  
Jeremy P. Jamieson ◽  
Harry Reis ◽  
Robert A. Josephs ◽  
...  

Abstract Adolescents who hold an entity theory of personality – the belief that people cannot change – are more likely to report internalizing symptoms during the socially stressful transition to high school. It has been puzzling, however, why a cognitive belief about the potential for change predicts symptoms of an affective disorder. The present research integrated three models – implicit theories, hopelessness theories of depression, and the biopsychosocial model of challenge and threat – to shed light on this issue. Study 1 replicated the link between an entity theory and internalizing symptoms by synthesizing multiple datasets (N = 6,910). Study 2 examined potential mechanisms underlying this link using 8-month longitudinal data and 10-day diary reports during the stressful first year of high school (N = 533, 3,199 daily reports). The results showed that an entity theory of personality predicted increases in internalizing symptoms through tendencies to make fixed trait causal attributions about the self and maladaptive (i.e., “threat”) stress appraisals. The findings support an integrative model whereby situation-general beliefs accumulate negative consequences for psychopathology via situation-specific attributions and appraisals.


2021 ◽  
pp. 251512742110292
Author(s):  
Darby R. Riley ◽  
Hayley M. Shuster ◽  
Courtney A. LeMasney ◽  
Carla E. Silvestri ◽  
Kaitlin E. Mallouk

This study was conducted to examine how first-year engineering students conceptualize the Entrepreneurial Mindset (EM) and how that conceptualization changes over the course of their first semester of college, using the Kern Entrepreneurial Engineering Network (KEEN)’s 3Cs as a starting point. Students enrolled in an introductory, multidisciplinary design course responded to biweekly reflection prompts on their educational experiences (either in high school or as a first-year college student) and related this experience to one of the 3Cs of EM: Curiosity, Connections, or Creating Value. Results indicate that students’ conceptualization of the 3Cs often align with definitions of EM from KEEN, as well as foundational works in the entrepreneurship field, and that their interpretation of each of the 3Cs does change during their first semester in college. For instance, students were less likely to write about curiosity and more likely to write about creating value at the end of the semester compared to the beginning.


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